One Country, Two Systems, One Smog Cross-Boundary Air Pollution Policy Challenges for Hong Kong and Guangdong By Lisa Hopkinson and Rachel Stern Rapid development of the Pearl River Delta has led to worsening regional air quality. In the last five years, the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and Guangdong governments have taken some tentative, yet crucial steps, towards addressing regional air pollution. In 2002, the two governments published a landmark joint study on cross-boundary air pollution, which recommended a number of measures to meet target reductions in air pollutants. In another promising development, the two governments also are considering a pilot emissions trading scheme. However, the two sides remain reluctant to include the public in decision-making despite nongovernmental projects like the Hong Kong and Pearl River Delta Monitoring Study that show the value of collaboration among different stakeholders. Experiences from the U.S.-Mexico border, a region facing similar problems as the Pearl River Delta, help indicate possible paths forward. Addressing regional air pollution in the Hong Kong-Pearl River Delta region will require creating new institutions to provide funding, raise public awareness, and lobby for change. The public must be involved in the design and execution of these institutions. Greater opportunity for public support will both facilitate more rapid reduction of air pollution and lower the social costs of cuts in emissions n 2002, Lonely Planet changed the cover of its travel (see Figure 1), caused by an almost 50 percent increase in guide to Hong Kong and Macau from a brightly ozone levels over the decade (Environmental Protection Icolored temple to the Bank of China building Department, 1999). silhouetted against a hazy sky. Inside, the guide tells While the Hong Kong government acknowledged visitors with respiratory conditions to consider this worrying increase in ozone, the Hong Kong “dangerously high levels of particulate matter and nitrogen Environmental Protection Department (EPD) largely dioxide” when planning to stay “for a prolonged period, focused on street-level pollution from diesel vehicles up particularly in summer” (Button, 2002, p3). The Lonely until the 1997 handover (Director of Environmental Planet warning marks international recognition of a long- Protection, 2000).2 Street-level pollution was a serious time environmental problem in Hong Kong—air problem both because of its acute health effects and pollution. because concentrations of particulates were so high. Levels 3 The air pollution problem reaches well beyond Hong of fine particulates and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) regularly Kong. The rapid development and urbanization in the exceeded Hong Kong’s Air Quality Objectives (AQOs)4 Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) and throughout the 1990s. In 1999 alone there were (CH2M Guangdong province have led to worsening air quality in Hill, 2002): the entire Pearl River Delta (PRD) region.1 The PRD covers 43,000 square kilometers and has a • 19 exceedances of 24-hour NO2; population of some 39 million people—904 persons per • 16 exceedances of 24-hour respirable suspended square kilometer (CH2M Hill, 2002). Over the last few particulates (RSPs); decades, rapidly increasing emissions from motor vehicles, • 18 exceedances of hourly ozone AQOs at 11 power stations, industry, and construction have resulted monitoring stations in Hong Kong;5 and, in deterioration of the PRD region’s air quality. Regional • One maximum hourly ozone concentration of 335 air pollution first became a significant public issue in micrograms per cubic meter of air (µg/m3 ) at a site Hong Kong during the 1990s because of a dramatic near Hong Kong’s new airport—40 percent above the reduction in visibility due to regional ozone pollution local AQO emission standard. CHINA ENVIRONMENT SERIES · ISSUE 6 19 FEATURE ARTICLES Figure 1. Visibility Trends in Hong Kong, 1991-2001 % Visibility < 8 km Note: Y-Axis values by dividing the number of hours when Visibility < 8 km and Relative Humidity (RH)<=80% by the total hours in the year when RH<=80% Source: Hong Kong Observatory, 2002 While Hong Kong has tracked city pollutants for the growing problem of regional air pollution in the years, up until 2002, there was no quantitative data on 1990s, their hands were tied by lack of quantitative data, regional air pollution or the relative contribution from the political situation prior to the handover, and fears different sources. Knowledge about regional air pollution that concentrating on cross-boundary air pollution would was limited to the observation that visibility in Hong reduce political support for measures to address Hong Kong tended to be worse in the drier winter months when Kong’s street-level sources. the prevailing winds come from the north and west (Cheng and Lam, 1998). THE HONG KONG GOVERNMENT RESPONSE The rise of regional pollution was tied to Hong Kong’s transition from a manufacturing to a service economy. Before the 1997 handover, there was little dialogue and In the late 1980s and early 1990s, much of Hong Kong’s cooperation between Hong Kong and mainland China manufacturing base moved across the border to take on environmental issues. The sole point of contact on advantage of lower labor costs. The number of this issue was the Hong Kong-Guangdong Environmental manufacturing plants in Hong Kong declined from Protection Liaison Group (the Liaison Group), which 48,000 in 1985 to 21,000 in 2000 (Hills, 2002). was set up in 1990 to enhance cooperation and As manufacturing plants moved across the border, coordination on environmental management and air quality worsened in Guangdong. Visibility in pollution control. The Liaison Group, made up of senior Shenzhen was nine times worse in the late 1990s than in officials from both sides, held annual joint meetings 1991 (CH2M Hill, 2002). In the period 1999 to 2000, alternately in Hong Kong and Guangdong. While a an hourly concentration of ozone of 457 µg/m3 was Technical Sub-Group was formed to implement the recorded in Foshan; and one-off 24-hour concentrations annual work program, joint activities largely consisted of of NO2 and RSP were recorded in Guangzhou at 307 visits, workshops and seminars to share experience and µg/m3 and 608 µg/m3, respectively (CH2M Hill, 2002). exchange views. Environmental nongovernmental These readings in Guangzhou were between two and four organizations (NGOs) and government advisors times greater than the mainland national air quality repeatedly chided the Hong Kong government for not standards, levels that posed serious threats to human taking bolder steps to discuss and implement cross- health.6 boundary cooperation projects with Guangdong (Lee, While the Hong Kong EPD was certainly aware of 2002). 20 CHINA ENVIRONMENT SERIES · ISSUE 6 A lack of transparency on both sides meant that meetings were held behind closed doors and minutes were not published, preventing dissemination of information and public discussion of the issue. While the mainland government publishes an environmental yearbook and 46 Chinese cities issue a weekly report on urban air quality, the quality of the information is poor. Environmental impact assessment (EIA) reports and some basic environmental monitoring data are still considered state secrets, especially emissions from state-owned factories. Lack of any concrete and common data on sources of regional air pollution hampered joint policy initiatives. Furthermore, the pre-1997 British colonial administration, led by then-Governor Chris Patten, was preoccupied with the handover and impending constitutional changes that Beijing often opposed—thus, relations with the mainland Chinese government were decidedly frosty.7 Sensitivities about Hong Kong’s political autonomy and fears that the mainland would drain the city’s financial reserves also strengthened resistance by pressure groups, legislators, and the government to any major cross-boundary initiatives (Lee, 2002). Lastly, cross-boundary pollution was not high on the environmental agenda prior to the handover. Initiatives taken by the Hong Kong government in the early 1990s to address street-level air pollution had met with The same view of Hong Kong’s famous skyline is markedly significant political opposition and had been withdrawn.8 clearer in summer (top) than the winter (bottom) months. Since pushing this initiative had occupied much of EPD’s time and resources, EPD was unwilling to tackle the more as the primary source of this worsening air quality, which complicated issue of cross-boundary air pollution while highlighted the need for joint action. significant domestic sources of street-level pollution Opportunely, both sides had agreed on the need to remained. Overall, the bigger political picture prior to jointly study air quality in the PRD region at the eighth the handover, differences in government culture, and lack meeting of the Liaison Group in January 1998. An Expert of transparency stymied efforts towards more active cross- Group comprised of technical professionals from both boundary cooperation on air quality. Hong Kong and Guangdong was set up to identify the scope of work required and put forward a proposal to the Post-Handover—Growing Concerns Liaison Group (Planning, Environment and Lands Following the handover, public concern in Hong Kong Bureau, 1998). The Liaison Group, at its ninth meeting about the growing regional air pollution problem began in August 1998, endorsed the proposal of the Expert to intensify,
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